So the founder of Kinship was crying over her bathroom sink after yet another cystic acne flare-up, grabbed papaya from her fridge, and just… started blending. That’s not a metaphor — she literally mashed fruit in her kitchen.
The wild part? She was a clean beauty exec at the time. Already had access to every lab on earth. Still chose her own Vitamix.
It’s a gel cleanser ($22) that looks like a melted Smurf — that blue comes from butterfly pea flower, not dye. I bought it because they claimed it dissolves makeup without stripping, which felt like a lie.
Papaya Enzymes
Eats dead skin without the sting of acids — leaves my face weirdly bouncy.
No Plastic Bottle
The tube is made from sugarcane. Composts in 90 days. I’m not a crunchy person and even I think this is cool.
Low Foam
It doesn’t sud up like drugstore stuff. First wash I thought it was broken. It’s not.
Photo: Element5 Digital / Unsplash
Three ingredients do the heavy lifting: papaya enzyme gently exfoliates, niacinamide calms redness, and glycerin stops your face from feeling like a dried-out sponge. No stripping sulfates — just fruit and science making peace.
- Papaya Enzyme: Loosens clogged pores without irritation
- Niacinamide: Shrinks pore appearance over time
- Butterfly Pea Flower: That blue color + antioxidants
- Glycerin: Keeps moisture barrier intact
Photo: Element5 Digital / Unsplash
Texture is like a slippery jelly — not thick, not watery. Rinses off in 8 seconds flat. No residue, no film, just a clean that doesn’t squeak.
Week two, I noticed my nose pores looked… smaller? Not gone — just less noticeable. Also: my sunscreen stopped pilling. That’s the enzyme working, breaking down the dead layer that was catching my SPF.
Photo: freestocks / Unsplash
My hormonal chin bumps calmed down by week three. Blackheads on my nose? Still there, but they’re smaller and less aggressive. Texture improved — my foundation sits flat now instead of catching on rough patches.
Photo: Marcelo Matarazzo / Unsplash
This is the cleanser I’d recommend to anyone who thinks “gentle” means “doesn’t work.” It just quietly does its job — no drama, no irritation, no plastic waste.